Affiliation:
1. Department of Mechanical & Industrial Engineering University of Toronto Toronto ON M5S 3G8 Canada
2. School of Engineering University of British Columbia Kelowna BC V1V 1V7 Canada
3. Department of Materials Science & Engineering University of Toronto Toronto ON M5S 3G8 Canada
Abstract
AbstractDroplet friction is common and significant in any field where liquids interact with solid surfaces. This study explores the molecular capping of surface‐tethered, liquid‐like polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) brushes and its substantial effect on droplet friction and liquid repellency. By exchanging polymer chain terminal silanol groups for methyls using a single‐step vapor phase reaction, the contact line relaxation time is decreased by three orders of magnitude–from seconds to milliseconds. This leads to a substantial reduction in the static and kinetic friction of both high‐ and low‐surface tension fluids. Vertical droplet oscillatory imaging confirms the ultra‐fast contact line dynamics of capped PDMS brushes, which is corroborated by live contact angle monitoring during fluid flow. This study proposes that truly omniphobic surfaces should not only have very small contact angle hysteresis, but their contact line relaxation time should be significantly shorter than the timescale of their useful application, i.e., a Deborah number less than unity. Capped PDMS brushes that meet these criteria demonstrate complete suppression of the coffee ring effect, excellent anti‐fouling behavior, directional droplet transport, increased water harvesting performance, and transparency retention following the evaporation of non‐Newtonian fluids.
Funder
Canada Foundation for Innovation
Subject
Biomaterials,Biotechnology,General Materials Science,General Chemistry
Cited by
10 articles.
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